Amazon.com Inc

NASDAQ: AMZN
$186.33
-$1.64 (-0.9%)
Closing Price on September 30, 2024

AMZN Articles

ThinkstockExxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) has barely held its market cap lead over two tech giants, Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL). Oil prices are sinking the...
Earnings reports from Amazon.com and Alphabet, which most of us still call Google, sent shares to new highs on Friday.
Friday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include AbbVie, Alphabet, Amazon.com, American Electric Power, Apple, Microsoft, Pandora Media and McDonald's.
Earnings season is in full swing, and 24/7 Wall St. has tracked many big movers in the after-hours trading session.
ThinkstockAmazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) reported third quarter 2015 results after markets closed on Thursday afternoon. The online retailer posted diluted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.17 and...
Without a rising tide in retail sales, damaged retailers like Sears and J.C. Penney could lose out to e-commerce powerhouses like Amazon.com.
While most of the large brick-and-mortar companies have said they will add tens of thousands of jobs for the holiday season, e-commerce giant Amazon.com will add 100,000.
Bad for the print book industry, and probably bad for makers of electronic book devices: fewer and fewer Americans are reading books.
24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of GM, Yahoo and some of the major companies reporting their quarterly results this week.
The lost children of the Web 2.0 internet IPO surge are Groupon Inc. (NASDAQ: GRPN) and Zynga Inc. (NASDAQ: ZNGA) which never created strong business models. While each stock has fallen this year,...
Investors judge Wal-Mart as a large and lumbering brick-and-mortar business while Amazon is viewed as a large and nimble technology conglomerate.
Alibaba Group announced Friday that it aims to acquire the portion of Chinese video streaming company Youku Tudou that it does not already own.
Wal-Mart's growth in both revenue and earnings has ended, and management can hold back the tide briefly, but only briefly.
The cloud computing market has become so large that it will produce over $100 billion in sales this year. The business is cutthroat enough that many competitors may not make money.
A resurgent Microsoft has picked up some fans on Wall Street, at least if short interest in its stock is any measure.